Deeds and affidavits
Property paperwork prepared with care, so the county records it without sending it back.
In plain words
A California deed has to be signed in front of a notary and recorded with the County Recorder's Office. I'll prepare the deed for you, walk you through what the notary will need, and explain how the recording works. I'm not an attorney, so I won't pick which kind of deed to use, but I'll prepare the one you tell me you need.
This might be a fit if…
- You're moving the house into your living trust
- Your husband or wife passed and you need their name removed from the title
- You got married or remarried and want to update the title
- You want to give a piece of property to a child or family member
- You need an affidavit of death to clean up the title records
How I help
- Prepare grant deed forms
- Prepare quitclaim deed forms
- Prepare interspousal transfer deed packets
- Prepare affidavit of death forms
- Help you set up the notary appointment and walk you through the county recording
What to expect
Call or send me a note so we can talk
You tell me which deed or affidavit you need
I prepare the papers based on what you said
I help you arrange the notary and explain how the recording goes
One honest note
I'm a registered Legal Document Assistant, not an attorney. I can't give you legal advice, pick documents for you, or speak for you in court. What I can do is prepare your paperwork based on what you tell me. If your situation needs legal advice, please talk to an attorney — I'll tell you straight if I think that's the right call.